BY LEE PFEIFFER
We at Cinema Retro are always delighted to find that a previously unavailable movie has been made accessible on home video. Such is the case with the low-radar 1971 MGM crime flick "Clay Pigeon", which Mvd Visual has just released on DVD. The film was the brainchild of Tom Stern, a character actor who appeared in small roles in many films before branching out and acting and directing biker movies in the late 1960s. Stern decided to create a star-making crime film for himself and raised the funding for "Clay Pigeon" independently. He then struck a deal with MGM to distribute the movie and pay for the marketing campaign in return for a slice of the grosses. The studio was bleeding red ink at the time and needed product to remain viable. "Clay Pigeon" fit the bill, with MGM having to make a relatively minor investment. The movie was released in many markets as the top feature in a double-fill with another soft-boiled crime movie, "Chandler" starring Warren Oates. It's clear that Stern felt this film would finally elevate him to leading man status. He not only plays the hero but he also co-produced andco-directed the film with Lane Slate, who at some point during production was either fired or left the film, leaving Stern to assume the direction alone."Clay Pigeon" was not a hit, however, and quickly faded from view.
The unique aspect of the movie is that it was a rare film to address the Vietnam War while the conflict was still raging. John Wayne's "The Green Berets", released in 1968 and financially backed by a reluctant Jack Warner, may have been a major hit but it set off protests in front of some of the theaters that were showing it. Hollywood wanted no part of the controversy and it wouldn't be until after the war that films such as "Coming Home", "The Deer Hunter" and "Apocalypse Now" would be viable to studios and audiences. "Clay Pigeon" opens in Vietnam with our protagonist, Joe Ryan (Stern) on patrol. An ambush ensues and Ryan heroically throws his body on a live grenade to shield his fellow soldiers. Fortunately, the grenade doesn't explode and Ryan is awarded the Silver Star. The action then moves to contemporary Los Angeles where Joe is trying to forget the war by living the lifestyle of a hippie, though we are told at some point that he is now an ex-cop (one of numerous script deficiencies that see key points left unexplained.) Joe is living a threadbare but happy life, boozing, smoking weed and getting it on with numerous young women who seem to always be in the mood. Meanwhile, a parallel story line follows Redford (Telly Savalas), a rogue government agent of undefined background who we witness murder a crime suspect. (As rogue cops go, Redford isn't the sharpest tool in the shed, as he assassinates the man by shooting him multiple times in broad daylight on a dock in full view of anyone near the river.) We find out that Redford has been relentlessly tracking a key drug kingpin, Neilsen (Robert Vaughn), for years. Cutting to the chase, Redford ends up asking Joe to act as a conduit to try to find his quarry. When Joe refuses, Redford frames him and forces him into acting as part of the sting operation.As the corrupt cop, Savalas plays his typical hard-boiled character, beating up suspects and giving orders to one and all.